New Monmouth Musings:
The World Needs Dreamers
Dear
Family,
I love
the story of the little ten-year-old boy, who was selling pencils door to door
in his neighborhood. When an interested adult at one house asked him the
reasons for selling pencils. He replied, “I want to raise six million dollars
to build a new hospital for the city.” Amazed, the inquiring adult exclaimed,
“That’s a mighty big job for just one little boy, isn’t it?” “No,” the little
boy responded, “I have a friend who is helping me.”
I love
that little story because I love that little boy. I love hanging around people
like that-those who dream big dreams-and I believe the world needs more people
like this little boy. It needs people who are not afraid to dream and risk and
dare to tackle great challenges. That is how progress is made and history is
changed.
It was
just 300 who were left from Gideon’s original army that defeated the
Midianites, and it was only 120 faithful prayer warriors in that Upper Room who,
after having received the promised Holy Spirit, ventured out boldly to win
their world for Christ. And it was Jonathan with only one of his armor bearers
who routed the whole Philistine army, because he knew that “Nothing can hinder
the Lord from saving, whether by many or few.” (1 Samuel 14:6)
God has
never been concerned with great numbers when it comes to accomplishing His will
and purpose. The world needs dreamers, who desire to do great things for God, and
who look to God and not the oddsmakers, for they know that one with God is always
a majority.
A
number of years ago, the late Robert Schuller, helped transform a non-descript
drive-in movie theater in Orange County, California, into the magnificent
Crystal Cathedral. Unfortunately, following Schuller’s death, the church’s influence and its once famous television
ministry waned, and today it is home of the Orange County Roman Catholic diocese.
Whatever one thinks of Schuller’s
theology, one can not dispute the fact that what he accomplished for Christ was
the direct result of his willingness to dream big dreams.
He writes, “My dreams had all come true and
when the dream comes true it dies. It no longer sustains and feeds you. I have
since written this prayer: ‘O God, let me die with my best dreams left unfulfilled’.
It’s a profound prayer for if I lived to see all my dreams come true, I will have
died before I died.” Renew Your Life! Catch a New Dream, Robert
Schuller, p. 6
Whether in the church, at home, or in the
office or on the athletic fields, we all must dare to dream big dreams, for
dreams are the stuff from which success is made and the foundation on which progress
is achieved. And you know it ain’t half bad when someone calls you a dreamer,
for I know of another dreamer. His name was Joseph, and his brothers sarcastically
labeled him a dreamer, and he didn’t do too bad for himself and his God.
Yours in faith and friendship,
Pastor Tom
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